I learned a long time ago, as a student of public policy and then as a journalist, that “for every public policy there are corresponding private interests.”
So arguments about whether and how to regulate artificial intelligence in the context of content businesses always will be a combination of abstract public values, impact on culture, fairness, content quality or art and perceived personal economic interest.
Every major technological shift affecting content industries has altered
who creates value
who captures income
whose social status changes.
Indeed, much of the economic value in content industries rests on scarcity, and AI threatens to create abundance. That might be a favorable outcome for content consumers, but might harm professional content producers.
Whenever scarcity declines, prices usually follow. So the content industry advocates concern about AI "ethics” also are about protecting existing economic rents.
That isn’t unusual. All professional associations, licensing requirements and unions, whatever their stated purpose (“safety,” often), are also about protecting economic rents.
We can cite many content industry examples.
Also, AI threatens not only earnings but also professional identity, as creative professions provide:
expertise
prestige
cultural influence
reputation
gatekeeping authority
community standing.
If AI enables non-experts to produce acceptable commercial work, professionals may lose status even before they lose substantial income.
The broader lesson from economic history is that technological debates are rarely contests between "public good" and "private greed."
Instead, all public policies have corresponding private interests.
AI raises authentic questions about authorship, consent, cultural diversity, and market power.
At the same time, it redistributes income, bargaining power, and professional status across the content ecosystem.
That isn’t to deny the legitimacy of the issues raised. But neither does it make sense to deny the private financial interests also at stake.